Yasmine Griffiths > Yasmine's Quotes

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  • #1
    Jim Jarmusch
    “Nothing is original. Steal from anywhere that resonates with inspiration or fuels your imagination. Devour old films, new films, music, books, paintings, photographs, poems, dreams, random conversations, architecture, bridges, street signs, trees, clouds, bodies of water, light and shadows. Select only things to steal from that speak directly to your soul. If you do this, your work (and theft) will be authentic. Authenticity is invaluable; originality is non-existent. And don’t bother concealing your thievery - celebrate it if you feel like it. In any case, always remember what Jean-Luc Godard said: “It’s not where you take things from - it’s where you take them to."

    [MovieMaker Magazine #53 - Winter, January 22, 2004 ]”
    Jim Jarmusch

  • #2
    Taylor Mali
    “We're the most aggressively inarticulate generation to come along since, you know, a long time ago!”
    Taylor Mali

  • #3
    David Foster Wallace
    “Hell hath no fury like a coolly received postmodernist.”
    David Foster Wallace, Girl With Curious Hair

  • #4
    “This is the postmodern desert inhabited by people who are, in effect, consuming themselves in the form of images and abstractions through which their desires, sense of identity, and memories are replicated and then sold back to them as products”
    Larry McCaffrey

  • #5
    Jean-François Lyotard
    “…is postmodernity the pastime of an old man who scrounges in the garbage-heap of finality looking for leftovers, who brandishes unconsciousnesses, lapses, limits, confines, goulags, parataxes, non-senses, or paradoxes, and who turns this into the glory of his novelty, into his promise of change?”
    Jean-François Lyotard

  • #6
    Brian Celio
    “Postmodernism has turned into this devil's vortex where no matter what you do, your neck will be turned and your face shoved into a foreign example, and worse, no matter what you say, despite the context, it will be considered a postmodern device. That's the danger of postmodernism: it poses itself as something that can't be trumped, something you can’t escape. It continually mocks your efforts for the sake of its name. I know even this will be seen as another postmodern bullet, and no matter what I say, critics and readers will be locked into how to lock me in.”
    Brian Celio, Catapult Soul

  • #7
    Jean-François Lyotard
    “Simplifying to the extreme, I define postmodern as incredulity toward metanarratives.”
    Jean-François Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge

  • #8
    Marcel Duchamp
    “All this twaddle, the existence of God, atheism, determinism, liberation, societies, death, etc., are pieces of a chess game called language, and they are amusing only if one does not preoccupy oneself with 'winning or losing this game of chess.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #9
    Marcel Duchamp
    “I force myself to contradict myself in order to avoid conforming to my own taste.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #10
    Marcel Duchamp
    “I don't believe in art. I believe in artists.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #11
    Marcel Duchamp
    “As soon as we start putting our thoughts into words and sentences everything gets distorted, language is just no damn good—I use it because I have to, but I don’t put any trust in it. We never understand each other.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #12
    Marcel Duchamp
    “The creative act is not performed by the artist alone; the spectator brings the work in contact with the external world by deciphering and interpreting its inner qualifications and thus adds his contribution to the creative act.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #13
    Marcel Duchamp
    “Art is either plagiarism or revolution.


    Marcel Duchamp

  • #14
    Marcel Duchamp
    “Destruction is also creation.”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #15
    Marcel Duchamp
    “The most interesting thing about artists is how they live”
    Marcel Duchamp, The Writings of Marcel Duchamp

  • #16
    Marcel Duchamp
    “My idea was to chose an object that wouldn't attract me, either by its beauty or by its ugliness. To find a point of indifference in my looking at it, you see”
    Marcel Duchamp

  • #17
    Jean-François Lyotard
    “Saddam Hussein is a product of Western departments of state and big companies, just as Hitler, Mussolini, and Franco were born of the 'peace' imposed on their countries by the victors of the Great War. Saddam is such a product in an even more Flagrant and cynical way. Because the Iraqi dictatorship proceeds, as do the others, from the transfer of aporias in the capitalist system to vanquished, less developed, or simply less resistant countries.”
    Jean-Francois Lyotard, Postmodern Fables

  • #18
    Claude Lévi-Strauss
    “It is only through difference that progress can be made. What threatens us right now is probably what we may call over-communication--that is, the tendency to know exactly in one point of the world what is going on in all other parts of the world. In order for a culture to be really itself and to produce something, the culture and its members must be convinced of their originality and even, to some extent, of their superiority over the others; it is only under conditions of under-communication that it can produce anything. We are now threatened with the prospect of our being only consumers, able to consume anything from any point in the world and from any culture, but of losing all originality.”
    Claude Levi-Strauss

  • #19
    Claude Lévi-Strauss
    “Our students wanted to know everything: but only the newest theory seemed to them worth bothering with. Knowing nothing of the intellectual achievements of the past, they kept fresh and intact their enthusiasm for 'the latest thing'. Fashion dominated their interest: they valued ideas not for themselves but for the prestige that they could wring from them.”
    Claude Levi-Strauss

  • #20
    Louis Althusser
    “There exists [a] word in German, Geschichte, which designates not accomplished history, but history in the present, doubtless determined in large part, yet only in part, by the already accomplished past; for a history which is present, which is living, is also open to a future that is uncertain, unforeseeable, not yet accomplished, and therefore aleatory. Living history obeys only a constant (not a law): the constant of class struggle. Marx did not use the term 'constant', which I have taken from Levi-Strauss, but an expression of genius: 'tendential law', capable of inflecting (but not contradicting) the primary tendential law, which means that a tendency does not possess the form or figure of linear law, but that it can bifurcate under the impact of an encounter with another tendency, and so on ad infinitum. At each intersection the tendency can take a path that is unforeseeable because it is aleatory.”
    Louis Althusser, Philosophy of the Encounter: Later Writings, 1978-1987

  • #21
    “While the popular understanding of anarchism is of a violent, anti-State movement, anarchism is a much more subtle and nuanced tradition then a simple opposition to government power. Anarchists oppose the idea that power and domination are necessary for society, and instead advocate more co-operative, anti-hierarchical forms of social, political and economic organisation.”
    L. Susan Brown, Politics of Individualism



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